When the Jehovah’s Witnesses put three of their prime Brooklyn properties on the market in December, we knew the opportunity would be a siren song for developers large and small. With bids due this week, new details have emerged about the possible uses of the sites, what they might fetch, and who is angling to acquire them.

Williamsburg-based Rabsky Group will soon ink a deal to pay roughly $48,000,000 for a potential-laden warehouse in the Bushwick loft area. Can you guess what they have in store for the site? Not condos!

Rabsky is jumping on the creative-Bushwick bandwagon, joining developers like Bushwack Capital and All Year Management to build commercial space (offices with a dash of retail) in the formerly industrial ‘hood, reported The Real Deal.

An additional outpost of the cell phone and communications company has signed a lease at 93 Court Street — a once-glorious Tudor-style architecture office — for $200 a square foot, a CPEX spokesperson told Brownstoner, in what may well be a new high for the area’s retail rents.

Based on a rendering from CPEX, which brokered the deal, the facade of the building will be repaired for the better, but sadly not restored. Trust us, you want to see it in its original glory:

The Jehovah’s Witnesses will have sold upwards of $1,000,000,000 worth of Brooklyn property by the time they complete their move upstate. But the plan to sell one site in particular — 85 Jay Street in Dumbo — has some locals fuming over profits on allegedly broken promises.

Clockwise from top left: The Vault CEO and co-founder Kevin Smith, The Vault’s future Crown Heights location in 1000 Dean, a view of The Vault’s current space in San Francisco, and The Vault COO and co-founder Sanjay Mody.

The Vault — a tech-oriented coworking company based in San Francisco — just signed a lease for a new outpost in 1000 Dean, the neighborhood’s creative office hive established by Brownstoner founder Jonathan Butler.